A BLOG FOR ME IN GAY PARIS

26 February 2007

beset by travel woes

i´ll get to the travel woes later, but i thought it worthwhile to update on my trip since san sebastian. thursday we took a bus to bilbao, which for us held a) an airport, b) a Guggenheim, and c) some local spanish kids who were friends of keith´s parisian roommate. we stayed in the old town, again in a pension, and spent the afternoon wandering around. on top of parque exteberria, we watched a gang of old men play a peculiar game of ¨bolistico¨which has similarities to bowling. then thursday night we took the metro out of town toward the coast to meet up with hasier and tamara, as well as their friends aiynara and benni. keith was limited to english, but conversed with aiynara and hasier, and i spoke with tamara, mostly in spanish. they were really nice and made sure we had a good time. then for friday they suggested meeting up for lunch, which we did, and they took us to get the ¨best sandwiches in town¨to be eaten in a nearby park. again, going out of their way to show us a good time. after hanging out a little more, we said a somewhat sad goodbye and headed for the Guggenheim. if you have no idea what Bilbao´s guggenheim looks like, look here. very modern, and incredible from inside.

friday night we caught a late night flight to Barcelona, though it was delayed and with bus trip and all, we didnt sleep until 330. saturday morning we met up with keith´s friend chris who randomly hopped on a plane from L.A. and met us here. we spent the day mostly outside, going up a nearby mountain and lunching in Park Guell. keith was really into Gaudi, and his interest was rather contagious. so sunday, after a visit to the Miro museum and a paella lunch, we visited Casa Mila which had a great exhibit on his work, and the house itself. then last night, we took in a soccer match, my first in Europe, first professional match anywhere--barça/bilbao. bilbao was pretty bad, but it was nice to see the home team win. the city has been packed with brits this weekend, so i think there were not too few soccer hooligans at the game.

as for travel woes, this morning i missed my flight to lisbon and i´ve rescheduled for tonight at 7. nowhere did they mention what time check-in closed, not to mention they moved the flight time up 5 minutes. i was pretty upset, and after some difficult communication with the Clickair office by phone, got a seat aboard tonight´s flight. word to the wise, don´t fly Clickair. so i´ll be staying in lisbon with the portuguese assistant from school, an experience i hope will give me some local flavor. then it´s back to paris friday, which i´m excited for. it´ll be nice to stay put for a while as well as to focus my time on getting to know that inexhaustible city. and of course people i know and look forward to seeing.

i hope you´re all well, in your various corners of the world. hasta luego from Barcelona, soon to be Lisbon!

Labels:

21 February 2007

kaixo from basque country

so i thought i´d update my adoring masses on my travels thus far. i´m currently basquing, as tyler harlan so cleverly put, in San Sebastian in the heart of Spanish basque country. we started our trip in Biarritz, where we had the good fortune to stay in the apartment of Keith´s family friend. we were thus able to cook dinner and have a base of activity. this was especially nice, since biarritz is fairly dull. being winter, there weren´t a lot of people in the area, and the weather was somewhat unfavorable. the exception was monday, when we rented a car and drove through the French countryside to a couple of towns: Saint Jean Pied-de-Port and Saint Jean de Luz. the former is a town along the Chemin de St Jacques or El Camino de Santiago. also in the town is a fascinating pelota or jai alai court.

yesterday, tuesday, we caught a bus down to San Sebastian. after a brief search, we found our current "pension"---the first guy threw us out because we didnt decide quickly enough, so we´ve swung to the other end of the spectrum where our current hostess calls us her "ninos" and "chiquitos" and continually touches our faces. i guess you cant beat spanish hospitality. we´ve had a good number of tapas(called pintxos here) and will likely eat more tonight. last night we heard the local Basque orchestra play Rossini´s Guillermo Tell Overture, Schubert´s 8th Symphony, and Mendelssohn´s 5th. with the exception of a trumpet player, they weren´t bad.

tomorrow it´s on to Bilbao, for the famed Guggenheim and some other museums that seem to live in its shadow. we´ve got a connection in that city as well, as keith´s parisian roommate Diego has put us in touch with some "very Basque friends". then friday night we fly to Barcelona late where we will eventually meet up with Keith´s friend from the States who told him two days ago he was flying to Barcelona. promises to be an adventure.

i hope to give another update in Barcelona, or when i´ve made it to Lisbon next week. hasta luego.

Labels:

15 February 2007

i am a jelly doughnut


as my clever title betrays, i spent this past weekend in Berlin. not only had it been on my list of places to stay during my current European sejour, but a friend from "uni" is/was doing a training period with Deutschebank in Berlin and provided extra motivation for paying a visit. And who can argue with a free place to stay?

those familiar with Easyjet and other cheap european airlines may know that to secure the cheapest flights, one often has to be willing to fly at ungodly times of the morning or night; in this case, i had a 640 am flight out of Paris-Orly. okay, that's not too unreasonable, but Easyjet closes check-in 40 minutes prior to the flight, which meant i needed to be there by 6 am and no public transportation would get me there in time. except the night bus, oh yeah!! said night bus was free and fairly speedy, but on the downside, it doesn't run near my apartment. so a couple of friends graciously let me "sleep" on their futon---i say "sleep" because it lasted a mere 4 hours before i had to hightail it to the bus stop. boring story short, i got to the airport, incredibly hungry and incredibly tired, and made it to Berlin just fine.

having spent the past 4, nearly 5, months in Paris, i was nearly shocked by the cheapness of Berlin. transportation, food, drinks, lodging--all are expensive in Paris. not so in Berlin. 1.50€ S-bahn ride into the city from the airport, compared to 8€ from Paris' Charles de Gaulle. lunch on friday, a famed "currywurst", set me back a whopping 1.70€. the most painful, however, was a pint of beer, Weihenstephaner Hefeweizen, a preferred libation of mine--3.30€, in a nice restaurant!! not at happy hour!! you couldn't really ever get a good beer for that much even in a happy hour in Paris.

not wanting to give the impression that all i did was eat, drink, and marvel at low prices, i'll detail a few of my visits. while Jenn worked friday, i hit the city on my own, wandering down Unter den Linden, the classical "strip" of Berlin. at the western end i strolled by embassies, an apparent favorite of Neal Palmer. one in particular was fascinating: the Russian Embassy still has hammer and sickle's carved into its facade. also at this end is the Brandenburg Gate, complete with a man dressed as a soldier with a communist flag in hand, ready for the oodles of passersby in the dead of winter in Berlin to snap a photo and collect some change. not far from the gate i visited the modern Memorial to the Holocaust, which consists of a memorial "park" and an underground museum. if i'm not mistaken, i heard Peter Eisenman, the man who designed the memorial, speak at Vanderbilt just last year. it's a fairly minimalist piece, consisting of blocks of concrete of varying heights in a grid-like fashion. the museum was interesting, not to mention warm.

i also saw the Reichstag's dome, which affords a nice view of the city, but there's nothing much to say about it.

saturday jenn and i(i have a friend here named Justin whose wife is named Jen, and whenever he says Jen and I it sounds like "gemini"...) went to a market to buy ingredients for dinner. this was perhaps the coldest hour of my life, or at least in recent memory. but it was fun to try to ask for certain things, like 50 grams of cheese, or pay for our goods, altogether relying on pointing and guessing at prices. this day was also our Berlin Wall day---on Neal's suggestion we visited the East Side Gallery, a 1/2 mile stretch of preserved wall recently(2000) painted by international artists. then it was on to the Museum of the Berlin Wall, which chronicled the wall's construction and events surround its construction and destruction. finally we finished the day at Haus am der Checkpoint Charlie, a maze of a museum with an overabundance of information but some fascinating artifacts and tidbits.

saturday night we were supposed to eat dinner at Unsicht Bar(unsichtbar means invisible, apparently), a restaurant where one eats in the dark, served by blind servers. there's one in paris, Dans Le Noir, and one to be opening in London. we didn't end up going, however, as it was rather pricey and the 50% off coupon we had wasn't valid on the weekends. i'm glad to say, however, that we did go to a restaurant mentioned in H&M's Berlin guide as a "cool" restaurant; at Monsieur Vuong we had bamboo tea, vietnamese beer, and Vietnamese noodles.

ok, quickly now, after a slow start sunday we hit the Hamburger Bahnhof museum, again per Neal's recommendation. very modern, some pieces interactive, some quite good. we tried to make an evening english church service, but having the time wrong and arriving late, we decided to forego church for the abovementioned Hefeweizen; i'm convinced we made the right choice(....)

starting saturday night, i had to depend on Jenn for dinero as my recently reissued French debit card didn't come with a reissued pin, and my American debit card was back in Paris. so monday morning we went to AmericanExpress to get a cash advance, only to find out that the office was closed. fortunately, the lady there let me borrow their phone to call AmEx and get the pin on my card to use it in an ATM. simple enough, until they, for security reasons of course, asked me questions not related to my account but available in a public database(!!!). they were the following: 1) what is the year, make and model of one vehicle registered to my home address?---answer, '93 Honda Accord; 2) in what year was my current home built?---i have no earthly idea; 3) what is the month of vehicle registration renewal for my home?---having just put the sticker on my car, i answered December, cringed through the pause, and pumped the air when i heard "correct"!

so monday consisted of a cash ordeal, a, once again, cheap breakfast, and a nervous train to the airport that got me there just minutes before check-in closed. but i made it back to Paris in one piece. as it would have it, monday in berlin was beautiful, blue skies and warmer temperatures. and of course it was gray and rainy in Paris. c'est la vie, as they say.

saturday i'm off to Basque country, Barcelona, and Lisbon during my 2 week school vacation. that's right, living in slightly socialist-minded France means 8 weeks of vacation during the school year, 12 hours of teaching as an assistant(now reduced to 10 just because they haven't given me any more hours), and a solid number of national holidays. i'll update on my journeys as i can, so stay posted.

Labels:

03 February 2007

Rennes

the better part of this week i spent in a town called Rennes, west of Paris in the region of Bretagne; Rennes is, in fact, Bretagne's capital. this Bretagne is the smaller version of Grande Bretagne, that is, Great Britain. the Bretons came from Britain in the 4th or 5th century a.d. from a cultural perspective, it's a rather interesting region, one of the last to cling tightly to its regional language, breton, a celtic language that appears altogether indiscernible to my eye.

for me, Rennes was the sight of the French Fulbright grantees midyear meeting, a small break from projects throughout the country for the 30 some odd grantees. people came from Grenoble, Strasbourg, Perpignan, Aix-en-Provence, and even a tiny little research center in the middle of nowhere in the western regions of France. we toured the city, learned about the devastating fires that have ravaged Rennes with unsettling frequency, listened to presentations from various grantees, visited the facilities of the largest daily French newspaper, and spent a good deal of time hanging out. we ate crepes, as crepes originate in Bretagne. we visited several of the popular student bars--Rennes is home to 60,000 students!! i have to say that the best part of the trip was certainly the people, laughing and joking as well as learning from their experiences.

the Rennes trip also got me out of 2 days of teaching this week, leaving me only thursday and 5 of my 12 classes. yesterday i went to discussion group as usual with Vintage, and today i walked along the canals in the northeastern corner of the city, in addition to translating letters for an hour.

coming up this week, i have a church-wide brunch sunday morning, with the idea being that each person brings a dish specific to his family and/or country. then sunday night is the super bowl, which i will watch with a group of Americans. and next weekend i'll be heading to Berlin, to visit the city as well as to see a Vandy friend, Jenn McCaleb. and not long after that i'll be on vacation for 2 weeks, heading to basque country, barcelona, and lisbon.

i haven't taken many pictures lately, but here are some great shots from the muddiest/most fun football i've ever played:

Labels: